Bright spot removal using a neural network

ABSTRACT

A method for image capture includes identifying a bright spot in an image. A neural network is used to recover details in bright spot area through a trained de-noising process. Post-processing of the image is conducted to match image parameters of recovered details in the bright spot area to another area of the image.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser.No. 62/756,917, filed Nov. 7, 2018, which is hereby incorporated hereinby reference in its entirety for all purposes.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present disclosure relates to system for removing bright spots fromimages using a convolutional neural network. In particular, a method forreducing extended or point source bright spots, reflections, lens flare,and glares is described.

BACKGROUND

Image details can be reduced, contrast reduced, images fogged, largearea ghosts created, and picture quality impacted by reflections fromsunlight or other bright light sources in or near an image field ofview. Daytime glares can often be attributed to reflections off mirroror glass surfaces that reduce details in the vicinity of the reflectiveobject. Night time photography is particularly susceptible to glarearound streetlights or other point sources, and even portraitphotography can be affected by eyeglass or clothing reflections.Sequential or video images taken by autonomous or semi-autonomousvehicles can also be affected, with headlights from oncoming vehicles orreflections from signs causing details to be “lost in the glare”.

A variety of computer processing techniques have been applied reduceglare in image. For example, High Dynamic Range (HDR) imaging can beused to reproduce a greater dynamic range of luminosity than is possiblewith standard digital imaging or photographic techniques. The techniquestypically merge multiple low dynamic range images, each with differentexposure times, which has the effect of reducing light saturated brightspots caused by long exposure times.

Other attempts have also been made to improve glare containing imagesusing post-processing. For example, US Patent Publication 20050129324,assigned to Hewlett-Packard, describes repair of a portion of an imagethat is partially or totally obscured or otherwise rendered undesirableby glare or another optical artifact in the image as captured by thedigital camera. According to described embodiment, the flawed portion ofthe scene containing the artifact is removed and replaced by acorresponding unflawed portion of the scene (i.e., the portion withoutthe artifact) to create the desired image without glare.

Alternatively, specialized sensor masks and hardware can be used toreduce glare. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,780,364, assigned toMitsubishi Electric Research, describes a camera having a lens and asensor, in which a pin-hole mask is placed in close proximity to thesensor. The mask localizes the glare at readily identifiable pixels,which can then be filtered to produce a glare reduced output image.

In some embodiments, convolutional neural networks can be a part of animaging system to reduce glare. For example, US Patent Publication20180039846, assigned to Seeing Machines, Ltd., describes a visionprocessor is able to ‘learn’ to disregard glare information and focusinstead on the parts of the image that are glare free. A convolutionalneural network that may not require the identification of landmarkpoints used, with information such as the degree of eye openness deriveddirectly from the images and the offline training data.

SUMMARY

A method for image capture includes identifying a bright spot in animage. A neural network is used to recover details in bright spot areathrough a trained de-noising process. Bright spots can be due to atleast one of bright source glare, bright source reflections, and opticalartifacts. Post-processing of the image is conducted to match imageparameters of recovered details in the bright spot area to another areaof the image. A fully convolutional neural network with an ability toaccept input images of any size can be used.

In one embodiment, a method for image capture includes receiving sensorspecific profiling data. A bright spot due to at least one of brightsource glare, bright source reflections, and optical artifacts isidentified in an image. A neural network based de-noising and the sensorspecific profiling data is used to recover details in the bright spotarea.

In some embodiments, image segmentation can be used to reduce size ofthe image requiring neural network based de-noising image. In otherembodiments, parameters of recovered details are matched either to areaslocal to the bright spot area or the entire image.

Applications include still imagery, product photography, portraitphotography, or vehicle related imaging. The image can be an HDR imageor a video image.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Non-limiting and non-exhaustive embodiments of the present disclosureare described with reference to the following figures, wherein likereference numerals refer to like parts throughout the various figuresunless otherwise specified.

FIG. 1 illustrates a method for reducing glare in images;

FIG. 2 illustrates neural network processing; and

FIG. 3 illustrates an embodiment of a fully convolutional neuralnetwork;

FIG. 4 illustrates representative images with synthetic glare corrected;

FIG. 5 illustrates on embodiment of a camera sensor processingprocedure;

FIG. 6 illustrates a system with control, imaging, and displaysub-systems; and

FIG. 7 illustrates one embodiment of a neural network trainingprocedure.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Recovery of image detail lost due to bright spots, glare, and noise canresult in significant improvement of image quality. Bright spots can beconsidered as areas of an image where the incoming photons from onelight source adversely affect the correct exposure of the photons fromanother source. Since photon shot noise is proportional to the squareroot of the intensity of the source of the photons, bright spots createlocal areas of photon shot noise that can “bury” the signals ofsurrounding features. In addition to noise contributions, bright spotscan increase pixel photon count considerably or completely oversaturatean area of the sensor.

For various reasons it may not be possible nor desirable to obtain animage without the bright spot(s). The following described embodimentsprovide a system and method able to recover or regenerate an underlyingsignal from the desired source in the presence of these bright spots.Advantageously, the operating envelope of the sensor is increased andimage quality is improved.

In addition to bright spot related noise, all image sensing systems andsensors will have some associated noise that is created during typicaloperation. In noisy environments such as is common in low lightenvironments (e.g. low environment lux, fast shutter, or small aperture)or high light environments (high environmental lux, slow shutter, largeaperture) this noise can become a dominant portion of the digitizedsignal. Unfortunately, many traditional and modern computer visionalgorithms (i.e. object or facial identification, visual odometry,visual SLAM, or image stabilization) can fail in high noiseenvironments. Algorithms and systems that reduce image noise and recoverimage details are needed to enable these algorithms to work inenvironments where they would typically fail.

Reducing noise can also benefit machine intelligence based processing ofimages. Modern learning based algorithms work exceptionally well forthose data distribution sets for which they have been trained on. Whenmachine learning algorithms are presented with data outside thisdistribution, or when using adversarial examples, accuracy, speed, andother performance measures of these algorithms can suffer. If imagesensor noise in images or data sets can be greatly reduced, learningalgorithms processing the images or data sets will be subject to alesser performance degradation.

Still another problem with noise is a result of noise being a highentropy information that is nearly incompressible. This means thatcompression ratios for a given system or sensor storage media will begreatly reduced for images capturing noisy environments or conditions.Compressed file sizes will typically end as much larger than theequivalent signal captured under normal operating conditions.

To reduce noise, improve image accuracy and provide detail recovery dueto bright spots, high light conditions, and improve compression ratios,a neural network can be used to recover the underlying signal. Ineffect, media preprocessed with a system and neural network such asdisclosed herein can be improved in image quality and compressed to agreater degree, resulting in smaller file sizes, and reduced storage orbandwidth usage. Advantageously, even correctly exposed images benefitfrom this preprocessing step.

As seen in FIG. 1, a system and method 100 for improving camera imagecapture capability relies on first identifying one or more bright spotsin an image (step 110). In a second optional step, the image can besegmented, with regions around a bright spot readied for furtherprocessing. In a third step, this image (or the bright spot andsurrounding region) is processed using neural network or other machineintelligence system to provide de-noising and consequent bright spotreduction. Finally, image postprocessing can be conducted to balancepixel intensity, color, or other image properties to ensure a best matchwith the rest of the image.

Bright spot identification can be based on the combination ofbrightness, size, or various radial or linear features. Multiple brightspots can be identified in the image and sequentially processed forbright spot mitigation or removal. In some embodiments, multiple imageshaving bright spots can be used as an input. In other embodiments,different images with different exposure times, different polarizationfilters, and different wavelengths can be used as inputs. In someembodiments, a neural network can be jointly trained to both identifyand reduce bright spots simultaneously. This can be accomplished bycrafting a network architecture that has a network output (“networkhead”) with an appropriately crafted objective function that identifiesbright spots. Jointly training in this way can have synergetic effectsfor the bright spot removal task, as well as reduce overall computationby amortizing network parameters over multiple tasks.

Image segmentation is an optional feature that can reduce required imageprocessing time. For example, instead of processing the entire image,only a surrounding region twice the radius of a bright spot can beprocessed. Alternatively, various sized rectangular bounding boxescentered on a bright spot can be used.

Neural network denoising can be accomplished by training with groundtruth images that include synthesized bright spot image simulations.Synthesized bright spots can be created by brightening pixel overlayswith various simulated or natural lens flare, glare, starbursts, orother suitable features. In some embodiments, a neural net can be usedto create a synthesized bright spot. Such bright spot simulations canhave a large variety of configurations including images with lens flare,glare, sun, on-coming head lights, and images including flash lightingfeatures. After training on images with the simulated bright spot,neural network denoising processing is able to produce images testableagainst ground truth images. Alternatively or in addition to syntheticbright spot simulation, bright spots can be removed by providing twocontrasting datasets: one with no bright spots, one with many brightspots. The network must then learn general properties that make upbright spots and also what makes “no bright spot” images, and thenlearns to remove bright spots such that they more closely imitateexamples from the “no bright spot” dataset.

Image post processing can include feature matching that permitsreplacement of bright spot areas in an image with similar features. Inother embodiments, certain bright spot features such as radial spikescan be identified and minimized by pixel randomization or overlays.

A wide range of still or video cameras can benefit from use of systemand method 100. Camera types can include but are not limited toconventional DSLRs with still or video capability, smartphone, tabletcameras, or laptop cameras, dedicated video cameras, webcams, orsecurity cameras. In some embodiments, specialized cameras such asinfrared cameras, thermal imagers, millimeter wave imaging systems,x-ray or other radiology imagers can be used. Embodiments can alsoinclude cameras with sensors capable of detecting infrared, ultraviolet,or other wavelengths to allow for hyperspectral image processing.

Cameras can be standalone, portable, or fixed systems. Typically, acamera includes processor, memory, image sensor, communicationinterfaces, camera optical and actuator system, and memory storage. Theprocessor controls the overall operations of the camera, such asoperating camera optical and sensor system, and available communicationinterfaces. The camera optical and sensor system controls the operationsof the camera, such as exposure control for image captured at imagesensor. Camera optical and sensor system may include a fixed lens systemor an adjustable lens system (e.g., zoom and automatic focusingcapabilities). Cameras can support memory storage systems such asremovable memory cards, wired USB, or wireless data transfer systems.

In some embodiments, neural network processing can occur after transferof image data to a remote computational resources, including a dedicatedneural network processing system, laptop, PC, server, or cloud. In otherembodiments, neural network processing can occur within the camera,using optimized software, neural processing chips, or dedicated FPGAsystems.

In some embodiments, results of neural network processing can be used asan input to other machine learning or neural network systems, includingthose developed for object recognition, pattern recognition, faceidentification, image stabilization, robot or vehicle odometry andpositioning, or tracking or targeting applications. Advantageously, suchneural network processed image normalization can, for example, reducecomputer vision algorithm failure in high noise environments, enablingthese algorithms to work in environments where they would typically faildue to noise related reduction in feature confidence. Typically, thiscan include but is not limited to low light environments, foggy, dusty,or hazy environments, or environments subject to light flashing or lightglare. In effect, image sensor noise is removed by neural networkprocessing so that later learning algorithms have a reduced performancedegradation.

In certain embodiments, multiple image sensors can collectively work incombination with the described neural network processing to enable wideroperational and detection envelopes, with, for example, sensors havingdifferent light sensitivity working together to provide high dynamicrange images. In other embodiments, a chain of optical or algorithmicimaging systems with separate neural network processing nodes can becoupled together. In still other embodiments, training of neural networksystems can be decoupled from the imaging system as a whole, operatingas embedded components associated with particular imagers.

Various types of neural networks can be used, including fullyconvolutional, recurrent, generative adversarial, or deep convolutionalnetworks. Convolutional neural networks are particularly useful forimage processing applications such as described herein. As seen withrespect to FIG. 2, a convolutional neural network 200 can receive asingle underexposed RGB image 210 as input. RAW formats are preferred,but compressed JPG images can be used with some loss of quality. Imagescan be pre-processed with conventional pixel operations or canpreferably be fed with minimal modifications into a trainedconvolutional neural network 200.

Processing can proceed through one or more convolutional layers 212,pooling layer 214, a fully connected layer 216, and ends with RGB output216 of the improved image. In operation, one or more convolutionallayers apply a convolution operation to the RGB input, passing theresult to the next layer(s). After convolution, local or global poolinglayers can combine outputs into a single or small number of nodes in thenext layer. Repeated convolutions, or convolution/pooling pairs arepossible.

One neural network embodiment of particular utility is a fullyconvolutional neural network. A fully convolutional neural network iscomposed of convolutional layers without any fully-connected layersusually found at the end of the network. Advantageously, fullyconvolutional neural networks are image size independent, with any sizeimages being acceptable as input for training or bright spot imagemodification. An example of a fully convolutional network 300 isillustrated with respect to FIG. 3. Data can be processed on acontracting path that includes repeated application of two 3×3convolutions (unpadded convolutions), each followed by a rectifiedlinear unit (ReLU) and a 2×2 max pooling operation with stride 2 fordown sampling. At each down sampling step, the number of featurechannels is doubled. Every step in the expansive path consists of an upsampling of the feature map followed by a 2×2 convolution(up-convolution) that halves the number of feature channels, provides aconcatenation with the correspondingly cropped feature map from thecontracting path, and includes two 3×3 convolutions, each followed by aReLU. The feature map cropping compensates for loss of border pixels inevery convolution. At the final layer a 1×1 convolution is used to mapeach 64-component feature vector to the desired number of classes. Whilethe described network has 23 convolutional layers, more or lessconvolutional layers can be used in other embodiments. Training caninclude processing input images with corresponding segmentation mapsusing stochastic gradient descent techniques.

In yet another embodiment, multiple neural networks can be used. Forexample, generative adversarial neural networks can be used, with onenetwork trained to add synthetic brightspots and an adversarial networktrained to remove the bright spots.

The described method and system can provide various benefits for manyapplications, including:

Still image improvement—Conventional photos can be improved, or certainareas with bright spots can be selected for improvement, with otherbright spot features left for aesthetic purposes.

HDR image improvement—Bright spot processing and neural networkdenoising can be done either before or after combination of short andlong exposure images.

Video image improvement—Correction of selected images can be used toguide neural network denoising of subsequent images in the video stream.

Vehicle image processing—Image segmentation can be used to reduceprocessing time and allow for near real-time recovery of information(such as signage text) that was lost in glare due to vehicle headlights.As another example, bright spot removal can improve a vehicle's imagingsystem scene classification and object detection.

Mobile device processing—Face recognition and device unlock can beimproved in bright or high glare conditions.

Medical imaging—Surgical imaging and/or surgical teleoperation withactive illumination within body cavities can be improved by bright spotremoval.

FIG. 4 illustrates representative images 400 with synthetic glarecorrected. Images 402 are original images. Images 404 have one or moresynthetic bright spots added. As is apparent, various types of brightspot size and radial features are shown. Images 406 are corrected byneural network denoising process.

Correcting bright spots or glare features can be done as part of ageneral imaging pipeline that uses neural networks to improve analog ordigital aspects of image data. For example, FIG. 5 illustrates oneembodiment of an imaging pipeline 500 for improving image data. Factorsthat affect analog processing of an image include scene lighting 502,optical path and aperture 504, and features of an image sensor 506. Manyof these factors can be automatically adjusted or adjusted to favorfactors that will improve efficacy of later neural network processing.For example, flash or other scene lighting can be increased inintensity, duration, or redirected. Filters can be removed from anoptical path, apertures opened wider, or shutter speed decreased. Imagesensor efficiency or amplification can be adjusted by ISO selection.

In one embodiment, low light images can be captured by increasing one ormore of these analog factors prior to analog to digital conversion.Bright spots, glare, noise or other unwanted artifacts can be removed bylater neural network processing 512 after analog to digital conversion508 and conversion into a suitable data structure 510 such as Bayerderived, RGB, RAW, TIFF, JPG, or the like. For example, a Bayer deriveddata structure could be defined to stack the color channels depthwise,such that the resulting dimensions are halved spatially and quadrupleddepthwise.

Image signal processing using an image signal processor 514 can includeadditional digital scaling, tone mapping, pixel correction, demosaicing,dehazing, or the like. In some embodiments, neural network processingcan run on the image signal processor 514, while in others a separateprocessing component can be used. A processed image can be stored,transferred, displayed, classified, encoded, or provided for any othersuitable intermediate or end use 518.

FIG. 6 illustrates a system 600 for training neural networks suitablefor bright spot or glare removal, as well as general analog and digitalimage processing. A control and storage module 602 able to sendrespective control signals to an imaging system 604 and a display system606 is provided. The imaging system 604 can supply processed image datato the control and storage module 602, while also receiving profilingdata from the display system 606.

Training neural networks in a supervised or semi-supervised way requireshigh quality training data. To obtain such data, the system 600 providesautomated imaging system profiling. The control and storage module 602contains calibration and raw profiling data to be transmitted to thedisplay system 606. Calibration data may contain, but is not limited to,targets for assessing resolution, focus, or dynamic range. Raw profilingdata may contain, but is not limited to, natural and manmade scenescaptured from a high quality imaging system (a reference system), andprocedurally generated scenes (mathematically derived).

An example of a display system 606 is a high quality electronic display.The display can have its brightness adjusted or may be augmented withphysical filtering elements such as neutral density filters. Analternative display system might comprise high quality reference printsor filtering elements, either to be used with front or back lit lightsources. In any case, the purpose of the display system is to produce avariety of images, or sequence of images, to be transmitted to theimaging system.

The imaging system being profiled is integrated into the profilingsystem such that it can be programmatically controlled by the controland storage computer and can image the output of the display system.Camera parameters, such as aperture, exposure time, and analog gain, arevaried and multiple exposures of a single displayed image are taken. Theresulting exposures are transmitted to the control and storage computerand retained for training purposes.

The entire system is placed in a controlled lighting environment, suchthat the photon “noise floor” is known during profiling.

The entire system is setup such that the limiting resolution factor isthe imaging system. This is achieved with mathematical models which takeinto account parameters, including but not limited to: imaging systemsensor pixel pitch, display system pixel dimensions, imaging systemfocal length, imaging system working f-number, number of sensor pixels(horizontal and vertical), number of display system pixels (vertical andhorizontal). In effect a particular sensor, sensor make or type, orclass of sensors can be profiled to produce high-quality training dataprecisely tailored to an individual sensors or sensor models.

FIG. 7 illustrates one embodiment of a neural network system 700 whoseparameters can be manipulated such that they produce desirable outputsfor a set of inputs and are capable of improving imaging quality fornoisy or bright-spot image data such as previously described. One suchway of manipulating a network's parameters is by “supervised training”.In supervised training, the operator provides source/target pairs 710and 702 to the network and, when combined with an objective function,can modify some or all the parameters in the network system 700according to some scheme (e.g. backpropagation).

In the described embodiment of FIG. 7, high quality training data(source 710 and target 702 pairs) from various sources such as aprofiling system, mathematical models and publicly available datasets,are prepared for input to the network system 700. The method includesdata packaging target 704 and source 712, and preprocessing lambdatarget 706 and source 714.

Data packaging takes one or many training data sample(s), normalizes itaccording to a determined scheme, and arranges the data for input to thenetwork in a tensor. Training data sample may comprise sequence ortemporal data.

Preprocessing lambda allows the operator to modify the source input ortarget data prior to input to the neural network or objective function.This could be to augment the data, to reject tensors according to somescheme, to add synthetic noise or bright-spots to the tensor, to performwarps and deformation to the data for alignment purposes or convert fromimage data to data labels.

The network 716 being trained has at least one input and output 718,though in practice it is found that multiple outputs, each with its ownobjective function, can have synergetic effects. For example, though theoverall objective of the system is to reduce the presence of brightspots, bright spot removal performance can be improved through a“classifier head” output whose objective is to classify objects in thetensor. Target output data 708, source output data 718, and objectivefunction 720 together define a network's loss to be minimized, the valueof which can be improved by additional training or data set processing.Alternatively or in addition, in some embodiments, a neural network canbe jointly trained to both identify and reduce bright spotssimultaneously. This can be accomplished by crafting a networkarchitecture that has a network output (“network head”) with anappropriately crafted objective function that identifies bright spots.

As will be understood, the camera system and methods described hereincan operate locally or in via connections to either a wired or wirelessconnect subsystem for interaction with devices such as servers, desktopcomputers, laptops, tablets, or smart phones. Data and control signalscan be received, generated, or transported between varieties of externaldata sources, including wireless networks, personal area networks,cellular networks, the Internet, or cloud mediated data sources. Inaddition, sources of local data (e.g. a hard drive, solid state drive,flash memory, or any other suitable memory, including dynamic memory,such as SRAM or DRAM) that can allow for local data storage ofuser-specified preferences or protocols. In one particular embodiment,multiple communication systems can be provided. For example, a directWi-Fi connection (802.11b/g/n) can be used as well as a separate 4Gcellular connection.

Connection to remote server embodiments may also be implemented in cloudcomputing environments. Cloud computing may be defined as a model forenabling ubiquitous, convenient, on-demand network access to a sharedpool of configurable computing resources (e.g., networks, servers,storage, applications, and services) that can be rapidly provisioned viavirtualization and released with minimal management effort or serviceprovider interaction, and then scaled accordingly. A cloud model can becomposed of various characteristics (e.g., on-demand self-service, broadnetwork access, resource pooling, rapid elasticity, measured service,etc.), service models (e.g., Software as a Service (“SaaS”), Platform asa Service (“PaaS”), Infrastructure as a Service (“IaaS”), and deploymentmodels (e.g., private cloud, community cloud, public cloud, hybridcloud, etc.).

Many modifications and other embodiments of the invention will come tothe mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachingspresented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings.Therefore, it is understood that the invention is not to be limited tothe specific embodiments disclosed, and that modifications andembodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appendedclaims. It is also understood that other embodiments of this inventionmay be practiced in the absence of an element/step not specificallydisclosed herein.

The invention claimed is:
 1. A method for image capture, comprising thesteps of: receiving a digital photograph having at least one bright spotcaused by glare from a light source hitting an image sensor of a camera;identifying the at least one bright spot within the digital photograph;processing, in response to the identifying; the digital photograph torecover detail in a first area of the digital photograph that containsthe at least one bright spot; and the processing comprising performing,by a fully convolutional neural network, a de-noising process to recoverthe detail.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the processing furthercomprises using image segmentation to reduce a size of a portion of thedigital photograph to which the de-noising process is applied.
 3. Themethod of claim 1, further comprising performing post-processing whereinat least one image parameter of the detail is matched to a correspondingparameter of a second area of the digital photograph.
 4. The method ofclaim 1, wherein the fully convolutional neural network is trained toprocess digital photographs of any size.
 5. The method of claim 1,wherein the digital photograph is an RGB image.
 6. The method of claim1, wherein the digital photograph is an HDR image.
 7. The method ofclaim 1, wherein the digital photograph forms one frame of a digitalvideo.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the camera is a vehicle-mountedcamera forming part of a vehicle imaging system.
 9. The method of claim1, wherein the digital photograph is a photograph of a product.
 10. Themethod of claim 1, wherein the digital photograph is a portrait.
 11. Amethod for image capture, comprising the steps of: using training datato train a neural network to perform a de-noising process, vs/herein thetraining data comprises clean versions of selected digital photographsand synthesized versions of the selected digital photographs, thesynthesized versions of the selected digital photographs each having atleast one synthetic bright spot applied thereto; receiving a digitalphotograph having at least one bright spot caused by glare from a lightsource hitting an image sensor of a camera; processing the digitalphotograph to recover detail in a first area of the digital photographthat contains the at least one bright spot, and the processingcomprising performing, by the neural network, the de-noising process torecover the detail.
 12. The method of claim 11, wherein the processingfurther comprises using image segmentation to reduce a size of a portionof the digital photograph to which the de-noising process is applied.13. The method of claim 11, further comprising performingpost-processing wherein at least one image parameter of the detail ismatched to a corresponding parameter of a second area of the digitalphotograph.
 14. The method of claim 11, wherein the digital photographhas a size that is different from at least one of the selected digitalphotographs.
 15. The method of claim 11, wherein the digital photographis an RGB image.
 16. A method for image capture, comprising the stepsof: receiving a digital photograph having at least one bright spotcaused by glare from a light source hitting an image sensor of a camera;receiving sensor specific profiling data corresponding to the imagesensor; processing the digital photograph to recover detail in a firstarea of the digital photograph that contains the at least one brightspot; and the processing comprising (1) performing, by a neural network,a de-noising process and (2) using the sensor specific profiling data torecover the detail.
 17. The method of claim 16, wherein the processingfurther comprises using image segmentation to reduce a size of a portionof the digital photograph to which the de-noising process is applied.18. The method of claim 16, further comprising performingpost-processing wherein at least one image parameter of the detail ismatched to a corresponding parameter of a second area of the digitalphotograph.
 19. The method of claim 16, wherein the neural network istrained to process digital photographs of any size.
 20. The method ofclaim 16, wherein the digital photograph is an RGB image.